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genetics
ch 8
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Arvin Saji
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Cards (18)
Aneuploidy
An organism gains or
loses
one or more
chromosomes
and has other than an exact multiple of the haploid set
Euploidy
Complete
haploid
sets of
chromosomes
are present
Monosomy
Loss of single chromosome in
diploid
genome (
2n-1
chromosomes)
Trisomy
Gain of single chromosome (
2n
+
1
chromosomes)
Nondisjunction
Chromosomes
or chromatids fail to disjoin and move to
opposite poles
during meiosis I or II
Monosomies
for autosomal chromosomes are usually not tolerated in humans or other animals</b>
Monosomies
are better
tolerated
in plants (less viable though)
Trisomies often found in
spontaneously
aborted fetuses (
20
percent of conceptions)
Polyploidy
More Than
Two Haploid
Sets of
Chromosomes
Are Present
Autopolyploidy
Addition of one or more sets of chromosomes
identical
to the haploid
complement
of the same species
Allopolyploidy
Combination of chromosome sets from different species as a consequence of
interspecific matings
Polyploidy is very common in
plants
but less common in
animals
Deletion
A chromosome
breaks
in one or more places and a portion of it is
lost
Duplication
A
repeated
segment of the
genetic
material
Inversion
Rearrangement of the
linear
gene sequence
Reciprocal translocation
Exchange of segments between two
nonhomologous
chromosomes
Nonreciprocal translocation
Rearrangement
of
genetic information without exchange
of segments
Cri Du Chat Syndrome is an example of a
deletion
with a
phenotype